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Dark Chameleon
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Everything posted by Dark Chameleon
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I have a 2014 S Kennedy Early Release PF70 Ultra Cameo 2hich I sold and posted but on arrival the holderwas swollen, nkt cracked but slightly bulbous...what could have caused it, the coin is fine, still a pf70uc but the case over the obverse and reverse feels bulbous, not going beyond the framed raised edge but I can feel the swelling..what caused it? and could it effect tye coin at any point?.
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I always tip my hairdresser in coins, I try to keep their value to $20 or so, which is a heafty tip as my haircut is only $25...lol..im an easy cut what can I say?. Anyway, I tip her usually one coin because her son who was 8 years old was talking to her and she mentioned me being a coin collector and he was interested, so I offerred her one day did she want her $20 tip or a 1 oz eagle, this was back when an eagle was $20 to buy...she said the eagle as I showed her it at the time. The next month a gave her a britannia, then a maple leaf, always in hard plastic holders, the next months it was modern 1 ounce silver coins until Christmas when I gave her a new Redbook and 'grading your coins' book for her son, now I give her historical coins, Indian head, 1943 war type set, morgan, peace dollar, hobo nickel etc, he now needs a large shelf putting up for the coins...I have family but they will get my choicest coins, these coins I give to the hairdresser are bought usually the week of...but I was wondering if any of you give back in some way to stop this hobby becoming the stamp collecting of the future..saying that I do love a nice penny red or black.lol.
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I have a 1909s that is graded an au55 and wanted to get the same grade 1909s vdb and put them in the same slab, thinking of doing the same with the standing liberty 1917 type 1 and 2 but don't know if NGC offers this, there does seem to be a demand for it id think for transition coins....1798 small and large eagle and the sweet 1921 morgan and peace dollar with of course others.
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is it or isnt it?
Dark Chameleon replied to Dark Chameleon's topic in Newbie Coin Collecting Questions
Why isn't it?. -
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I'm busy-bee-company, usually got some stuff for sale, baseball cards,coins, complete sets, graded etc.
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I've had a coin in under modern that was opened on June 29th, I was running 4 days over maximum before they then increased the maximum date to 42 for modern, so is it added to the longest waited or nearest to the end?, that seems like it's being pushed back again and again and again for newer customers paying higher tiers or bulk pushing us smaller customers back forever more.
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Buy the Coin, Not the Holder...
Dark Chameleon replied to 124Spider's topic in US, World, and Ancient Coins
I'll wait till its all electronic grading so every number and + and * is represented and a site explaining exactly why and why it didn't reach the next level for slab hounds, for raw collectors it's personal appearance over any number, looking at multimillion dollar coin sales and thinking it appears hideous to me or a barely readable coin with history is invaluable yet sells for a few dollars then grading would be nothing more then keeping it protected from worsening. -
Buy the Coin, Not the Holder...
Dark Chameleon replied to 124Spider's topic in US, World, and Ancient Coins
Whilst getting my collection of ms65 peace dollars I have studied a few hundred coins and being that they are 65 specific I have seen the extremes that fall within the grade from ugly toning and scratched to blast white...most likely dipped but still achieve the grades, its subjective for the most part I think, if you like blasted then something with no signs of history at all will be the best of, if you like history then a scratch is going to give it a story....mine I'd say are pretty level in their grade or of course I'd not have purchased them but there is one been on ebay for a while with no takers and I understand why, just because it reaches a grade does not mean it reaches the price its asking for. -
And id assume that those who dive head long into the books are more like traders then those seeking to profit from purchases on a smaller scale where general knowledge increase matters most...id think the highest proportion of hobbyists books with coins would be the red book and blue book with perhaps a grading book as general reading...specific books are probably works of love like restoring cars, writing them will not produce a profit but might aid others or themselves (ego) because there are not going to be more then a few thousand people interested in early sumarian fake coin manufacturers comparred to early colonial types sets or treasure gold finds.
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I think jts more a reverse interest where you buy a coin then if interested you buy more and then to avoid being scammed or interest alone brings you to reading up on grading, valuing, history of that type, etc...some come at the hobby from a general like of history, some from profit, some from just looking for a hobby even..whichever way they do it God love them for being interested at all in whatever way they are or it would gave gone the way of stamp collecting years ago.
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It's like the magazine racks in Barnes and Noble, they have lots of car magazines but who is going to read about a BMW if they own or are interested in a Triumph, it would be mad to suggest toothat they read about the invention of the internal combustion engine to understand the Triumph herald, its superfluous to their particular interest..I read the coin mags, am an online subscriber to coin world, read archeology and history of particular times my coins may have come from and been handled and used in but I don't read it all or I'd have yet to buy my first coins.
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About is a collection of information not an I structure manual, people thinking we need to digest everything in order to begin anything are 'Bigly' mistaken, we can store them in things like libraries for study on one particular subject not have to learn about every coin ever minted to understand our one year of capped bust half penny.
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Every collecfor begins somewhere, is it wrong to collect silver coins because of stories from your grandfather about the treasure ships wrecked?, each to their own, how, why or when they begin should not be judged by those who took a different path, a lot of people bought metal detectors to find old hordes but became detectorist who read books, study satellite pictures, are members of clubs and post questions and gained knowledge on forums but they are no more important then the amateur who picks up a machine from a pawn brokers and goes out in the field around their house at 10 years old, don't diminish the beginner just because you no longer are...different horses for different courses.